Edit: A previous version of this post contained significant errors, which was pointed out in the comments. I mark and correct them in this version, but I believe my point is largely unaffected.
I originally wanted to write a comment to the forum post CEA Disambiguation, which contains further context, but I believe this warrants its own post.
The Effective Ventures Foundation (formerly known as CEA) (I'll call them EVF) runs many projects, including 80.000 hours, Giving What We Can, Longview Philanthropy, EA Funds, and the Centre for Effective Altruism (CEA), which in turn seems to run this forum.
It is very strange to learn that these organizations are not independent from each other, and the EVF board can exert influence over each of them. I believe this structure was set up so the EVF board has central control over EA strategy.
Edit: I now believe that this structure was set up to share resources like ops and oversight. It's not clear to me that this is the correct choice. I do not believe that 80k, GWWC , EA Funds and CEA are sufficiently protected from interference or legal risks.
I think this is very bad. EVF can not be trusted to unbiasedly serve the EA community as a whole, it misleads donors, and it exposes effective altruism to unnecessary risks of contagion.
An example (misleading donors):
As "Giving What We Can", EVF currently recommends donations to a number of funds that are run by EVF:
- Longview Philanthropy: Longtermism Fund
- several Funds run by Effective Altruism Funds
Through the "EA Funds Longterm Future Fund", EVF has repeatedly paid out grants to itself, for example in July 2021 it paid itself $177,000 for its project "Centre for the Governance of AI".
Another example (biased advertising):
On https://www.effectivealtruism.org/, which serves as an introduction to EA, the EVF links to its own project 80000hours, but not to the competing Probably Good.In both examples, the obvious conflicts of interest are stated nowhere. Edit: On GWWC's page, The conflict of interest is stated somewhere, but I missed it when quickly looking for it.
What should we do?
I have not thought hard about this, but I have come up with a few obvious-sounding ideas. Please leave your thoughts in the comments!
This is what I think we should do:
- I think we should break up the EVF into independent projects, especially those that direct or receive funding. Until that happens, we should conceive of EVF as a single entity.
- We need to push for more transparency. EVF's "EA Funds"-branded funds publicly disclose their spending, which is commendable! EVF's "Longview Longtermism Fund" does not. (Edit: The Fund had previously credibly committed to releasing a spending report, which I missed)
- Funds should definitely disclose their conflicts of interest.
- We should champion community-run organizations like EA Germany e.V. or the Czech EA Association, and let them step into their natural role of representing the community. GWWC members should demand control over their institution.
- We should continue the debate about EA's governance norms. In order to de-risk the community and to represent our values, we should establish democratic, transparent and fair governance on all levels, including local groups.
- We probably should rethink supporting community leaders that consolidate their power instead of distributing it.
DFTBA,
Ludwig
PS: the same consideration applies for effektiveraltruismus.de, which is run by an EA donation platform, and not by EA Germany. (Edit: The page has now been transferred. Thanks!)
Hi — I think this post overstates the level of program-level centralisation here.
The EVF and CEA US boards provide overall oversight and governance of the projects and their executive directors, and will occasionally step in to change something important. But they have largely delegated program-level responsibility to each project’s executive director, who each set their own strategy for how to best have a positive impact on the world.
In practice, those strategies do differ: to give a couple of examples, CEA and 80,000 Hours have pretty different approaches to cause prioritisation; while Asterisk (a CEA US project) published a very critical review of What We Owe the Future (a book written by an EVF project lead and board member). The boards also very much want EA work to flourish outside of the EVF and CEA US governance structures — many of the grants made by the EA Infrastructure Fund support this work.